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Sonia resigns as MP, to fight election again
www.chinaview.cn 2006-03-23 21:20:33

    New Delhi, March 23 (Xinhua) -- Sonia Gandhi, head of India's ruling coalition and president of the Congress party, Thursday stunned India by resigning as a member of parliament (MP) in order to end an acrimonious row over her holding an "office of profit" and vowed to fight elections again.

Sonia Gandhi, head of India's ruling coalition and president of the Congress party, Thursday stunned India by resigning as a member of parliament (MP) in order to end an acrimonious row over her holding an "office of profit" and vowed to fight elections again.

    Indian Congress Party leader Sonia Gandhi addresses the media in New Delhi, India, Thursday, March 23, 2006. Sonia Gandhi, the head of governing coalition, steps down as a member of Parliament amid controversy over whether she also holds another job.(Xinhua/AFP)

   Gandhi announced her dramatic decision at her residence in a bid to puncture an opposition campaign that accused the government of trying to protect her by enacting a special ordinance.

    Reading out a prepared statement in Hindi, she said that she resigned both as a member of parliament and head of the National Advisory Council, which advises Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on development matters. This is the post that had become the focal point of the controversy.

    "I have done this because I think it is the right thing to do," Indo-Asian News Service quoted Sonia Gandhi as saying.

    But the 59-year-old Gandhi will remain the party's president and chairperson of India's ruling United Progressive Alliance (UPA).

    Gandhi vowed to fight parliamentary elections again from Rae Bareli, a sprawling mainly agrarian constituency in Uttar Pradesh from where she won in 2004 and which was earlier represented by her mother-in-law and prime minister Indira Gandhi.

    As news of her imminent resignation spread, hundreds of Congress party's supporters converged outside her residence and raised slogans hailing Gandhi and urging her not to resign.

    Gandhi's decision followed a high-pitched anti-Sonia campaign unleashed principally by the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and Samajwadi Party after the latter's Jaya Bachchan was stripped of her Rajya Sabha membership over a similar accusation of holding an"office of profit" while being an MP.

    Bachchan, wife of Bollywood superstar Amitabh Bachchan, once exited from parliament, an incensed Samajwadi Party and the BJP halted Indian parliament session with vocal protests, accusing the Indian government of preparing to enact an ordinance to protect Gandhi.

    Although several other MPs are also embroiled in the controversy, these two parties concentrated their fire on Gandhi.

    Moments after Gandhi's announcement, BJP spokesperson Arun Jaitley poured contempt on the Congress president, saying thus was a desperate attempt to save her face.

    The reference was to the sudden adjournment of parliament Wednesday amid media reports that the government planned to come out with the ordinance with retrospective effect to nullify a 1959 rule that bars MPs from holding any post that would be deemed an "office of profit". Enditem

Editor: Lu Hui
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